Placeholder Imagephoto credit: DxE via Bay City News
Wayne Hsiung is arrested at Sunrise Farms in Petaluma on May 29, 2018.
A California court of appeals has overturned two convictions for an animal rights activist found guilty by a Sonoma County jury in 2023
of felony conspiracy and trespassing stemming from actions he took at Petaluma chicken and duck farms in 2018 and 2019.
 
Animal rights organization Direction Action Everywhere said Thursday the court reversed the felony conspiracy charge and one misdemeanor trespass charge for Direct Action Everywhere, or DxE, co-founder Wayne Hsiung.
 
The animal rights group said the court rejected the prosecutor's argument that animals are to be categorically excluded from a "necessity defense."

A necessity defense argues that a person committed a crime only to prevent a greater harm.
 
In a statement Friday, the Sonoma County District Attorney's Office contests the way DxE characterized the court's decision. 
 
Instead, Sonoma County District Attorney Carla Rodriguez says the court of appeals "reviewed the convictions and addressed limited legal issues about what evidence the jury should have been allowed to consider."

She emphasizes the decision did not create any right to trespass.

"The District Attorney’s Office respects lawful protest and the right to advocate for changes in law or policy," according to the May 1 statement. "Strong beliefs do not create a legal right to trespass, interfere with regulated industries, or take property."

Hsiung's attorney argued that the jury was not allowed to see evidence related to his claim that his actions were legally justified under the necessity defense.

"We agree with defendant that the trial court erroneously limited his presentation of evidence to the jury related to his two-prong mistake of law defense," reads the ruling.

The court also reversed his count of conspiracy to commit trespass by refusing to leave private property and his count of trespassing with intent to interfere with lawful business.
 
Hsiung was sentenced in November 2023 to 90 days in jail and two years probation after he and other members of DxE converged on Sunrise Farms in Petaluma on May 29, 2018 to protest and remove chickens.
 
The group did the same thing on June 3, 2019 at the Reichardt Duck Farm, also in Petaluma. Hsiung supported the protesters and spoke with law enforcement at the scene.

Hsiung said that taking animals from a factory farm is exercising a "right to rescue" law, akin to the legal right to break into a car to rescue a dog in hot temperatures. The organization is hoping to make legal the right of people to enter places such as a factory farm to remove animals that are being "exploited" or are in distress.

"That the court has reversed the majority of Mr. Hsiung's convictions just a matter of days after argument is a major rebuke to a trial that we have always insisted was riddled with legal and factual errors," said Justin Marceau, director of the Animal Activist Legal Defense Project at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law, who argued the appeal. "The court has notably rejected the state's argument that animals are categorically excluded from a necessity defense. This is a significant victory for animal protection and the rights of animal activists to defend them."
 
But according to the Sonoma County District Attorney, "the Appellate Court unequivocally held that ‘necessity’ is not a legal defense to Mr. Hsiung’s actions. To be clear, all future trespassers are on notice that so-called “open rescues” are not justified under this legal theory, and any claim to be “mistaken” about the law is no longer credible."

"At best, DxE’s public statement about the appellate decision is a misunderstanding of the law; at worst, it is a deliberate misrepresentation of the Court of Appeal’s decision," the DA's May 1 statement continues. "The Hsiung opinion addressed a narrow issue about whether a jury should be able to consider a defendant’s honest but mistaken belief about the law. They felt that the jury should have heard this information, and I respect their decision. With one conviction remaining, we will decide the best path forward after reviewing the record.”

Prosecutors said Hsiung and others effectively shut down farm operations at both locations and chained themselves to fixtures at the duck farm.

DxE activist Zoe Rosenberg was found guilty in October 2025 of felony conspiracy and misdemeanor counts of trespassing and tampering with a vehicle for entering Petaluma Poultry -- a subsidiary of Perdue Foods -- in June 2023.

According to prosecutors, Rosenberg carefully planned out an illegal chicken heist, complete with disguises, tracking devices, stealing business records, and a safe house. According to DxE, the chickens were rescued from inhumane conditions and her trespassing was a moral imperative.
 
Editor's note: This story has been updated after an initial April 30. 2026 publication to reflect the Sonoma County District Attorney's statement dated May 1, 2026.

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